Archive for the ‘Temples’ Category

Mormon baptism of non-Mormons: So what?

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009

From Beliefnet:

Big hoo-ha over whether or not the Latter-Day Saints ritually “baptized” Obama’s mother after her death (which is something Mormons do). I say, So what if they did? What is that to me? If the Mormons want to “baptize” me in this way without my consent, I suppose I wish they wouldn’t, but if they do, what’s it to me? No offense to my Mormon friends, but as a non-Mormon, I believe this to be a ritual without any objective spiritual significance (as distinct from, say, a validly ordained Orthodox priest being the vessel through which the Holy Spirit transforms wine and bread into the literal Body and Blood of Jesus Christ, which I firmly believe occurs even if nobody else does).

Anyway, insofar as it affects my eternal destiny or present spiritual condition not one whit, why should I care in the slightest if the Mormons wanted to hold a baptismal ceremony for me after I die? Why should you? Seriously.

Draper Temple Dedication

Saturday, March 21st, 2009

From ABC4.com (SLC)

Saturday was the second day of dedication for the newest LDS temple in Draper.

Friday, during the cornerstone ceremony, LDS Church President Thomas S. Monson took trowel in hand to set the cornerstone, and then invited others to do the same.

The final dedicatory session will be held Sunday, March 22.

The temple in Draper is the 129th worldwide and the third in the Salt Lake Valley.

The Oquirrh Mountain Temple in South Jordan is expected to open this summer.

Eamonn McCann: What if Mormons are right and Catholics and Protestants wrong?

Friday, February 20th, 2009

From The Belfast Telegraph (Northern Ireland):

Given Christian teaching, does it make more sense to baptise dead adults rather than live babies? 

Why are the Catholic bishops so concerned about Mormons baptising dead parishioners? The Mormons didn’t invent baptism of the dead. The practice has a significant history within mainstream Christianity. The decision to order its abandonment was taken only after heated debate, and was a close-run thing.

What’s the difference, anyway, between baptising the dead and baptising babies? A tiny infant will have as much understanding as a dead person — none at all — of the complex philosophical belief-system it’s being inducted into when baptised, say, a Catholic. Transubstantiation? There’s daily communicants go to their deaths without any clear understanding of the concept. So what chance the mewling tot?

Indeed, given that all Christian Churches believe that the soul lives on after death and retains understanding and consciousness of self, doesn’t it make more sense to baptise dead adults than live babies?

Apart from which, if the Catholic bishops hold that the beliefs of the Mormons are pure baloney (as they must), and their rituals therefore perfectly meaningless, how can it matter to them what mumbo-jumbo Mormons might mutter over Catholic cadavers?

The current controversy has been prompted by Archbishop Dermot Clifford and Bishop Bill Murphy complaining to the National Library in Dublin about records handed over by the Church being made available to all and sundry. The Mormons are believed to have taken advantage of this facility to comb through parish records and baptise the souls enumerated therein, a batch at a time.

The bishops stepped in after the Vatican warned all national churches earlier this year about Mormons misusing diocesan records. I have heard it suggested that the alarm of the Holy See had escalated after reports that Mormon multiple baptisms were regularly breaking the official record set by General Liu Kung Lee who, in one afternoon, baptised seven regiments of Chinese soldiers into Christianity with a fire-hose.

Let’s look at the facts as understood by the early followers of Christ. For more than 300 years after the Crucifixion, baptism of the dead was widely accepted, its biblical basis located in 1 Corinthians 15, 29: “Otherwise, what shall they do who are baptised for the dead if the dead rise not again at all? Why are they then baptised for them.” In other words, a deceased person could be baptised by proxy: otherwise, how could such a person be included in the Resurrection? A good question.

The radical Cerinthians and the Marcionites were especially energetic baptisers of the dead. It was to wrong-foot these sects, seen as competitors with the official Church at a time when it was consolidating its position as the State religion of the Roman Empire, that the Synods of Hippo (393) and Carthage (397) voted, after bitter debate, to condemn the practice.

Interestingly, a clear trace of baptism of the dead has lingered in official practice to the present day, in the form of prayers for divine intercession on behalf of the unbaptised souls. Prayers for intervention were encouraged in Catholic schools in the 1950s. For all I know, this remains the case.

Baptising the dead might be seen as analogous, too, to the Jewish prayer of intercession. Which serves as a reminder that US Jews put a halt to galloping post-mortem Mormonism a couple of years ago by arguing that deJudaising those who’d perished in the concentration camps constituted a profound insult to Holocaust victims. Following talks in New York between leaders of the two religions, the Mormons backed off.

The key point is, surely, that all religions believe that the soul, after death, at last knows what’s what — whether Hinduism, Free Presbyterianism, Jainism, Judaism, Islam, Catholicism or whatever is the true religion. What if it’s Mormonism? What if it’s an everyday occurrence on the other side that Catholics and Protestants are left standing dumbstruck at the Gates, gasping: “Mormons! Who’d have believed it?” And maybe a wife berating her husband: “There! I told you it would be the Mormons! But would you listen?! Now it’s eternal hellfire for the two of us, I hope you’re satisfied.”

In that scenario, shouldn’t all members of all other religions be literally eternally grateful to the Mormons for sharing their saving grace even unto and after death?

If, on the other hand, it isn’t the Mormons at all, those who turn out to have been right can wave a merry farewell to the crestfallen followers of Brigham Young as they trundle downwards to their eternal comeuppance.

What’s the problem?

Groundbreaking set for Gila Valley (AZ) LDS temple

Sunday, February 1st, 2009

From The Eastern Arizona Courier:

Nearly 10 months after first being announced, the Gila Valley Arizona Temple will have its groundbreaking and site dedication ceremony Feb. 14 at 9 a.m.

The ceremony will take place at the temple site located at 5291 W. Hwy. 70 in Central. It is currently a stake ballpark with four baseball fields. The temple and an adjoining chapel will be constructed on the northern side of the property while retaining two of the baseball fields on the southern side.

Temples are sacred buildings to members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and differ greatly from he church’s chapels. A temple is where members who carry a temple recommend learn more about the purpose of life and make covenants to serve Jesus Christ and their fellow man.

Members who are in good standing in the church are interviewed by their area’s church leaders before being granted a recommend. The recommend is a small card with member information that must be shown before being allowed inside a dedicated temple. This is due to the sacred nature of the temple.

Templegoers also participate in religious ceremonies that reach beyond mortality, including baptisms on behalf of deceased ancestors and eternal marriage, according to the church’s official Web site lds.org.

Former President Gordon B. Hinckley previously described temples as a place where life’s mysteries are answered.

“Temples of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints are sacred structures in which these and other eternal questions are answered,” he said. “Each is dedicated as a house of the Lord, a place of holiness and peace shut apart from the world.

“There truths are taught and ordinances are performed that bring knowledge of things eternal and motivate the participants to live with an understanding of our divine inheritance as children of God and an awareness of our potential as eternal beings.”

The Gila Valley Arizona Temple will be the third LDS temple in Arizona. It is the first of three proposed temples for the state.

The Mesa Arizona Temple and the Snow-flake Arizona Temple are in operation, and the Phoenix Arizona Temple is still in its design and construction approval phase.

The Gilbert Arizona Temple is in the design phase, with an anticipated groundbreaking in early 2010. When all of the various construction is completed, Arizona will have five LDS temples.

Details concerning speakers and participants in the groundbreaking ceremony for the Gila Valley temple have not been made official and have therefore not been released, according to Safford Stake President Mark Herrington.

Construction of the temple is expected to last 12 to 18 months. When finished, the temple will help alleviate congestion at the Mesa Arizona Temple, which is attended by more patrons than any other temple outside of Utah, according to a previous LDS news release.

The Phoenix and Gilbert temples will provide services for members who otherwise would have gone to the Mesa temple when they open as well.

The general public will be able to view the inside of the temple during an open house after construction is completed and before it is dedicated.

Link to article

T. Dennis Barney– celebrated Arizona philanthropist, builder

Tuesday, January 6th, 2009

From The Arizona Republic:

A developer who quietly orchestrated reformation of a drug-infested neighborhood into a gateway for the LDS Mesa Arizona Temple died Monday at his Gilbert home.

The death of T. Dennis Barney stunned and saddened friends, many of them community leaders in Mesa and Gilbert where his work for charitable causes and the Mormon Church were felt. He was 62.

“He was not only a tremendous force in the community, he was one of the mainstays of the (Mormon) church,” said longtime friend, Roc Arnett, president of East Valley Partnership. “He was stake president, which means he was a spiritual adviser for students of the Tempe-Arizona University Stake. He will be a big loss to the community, his church and his friends.”

Barney’s companies, CDB Properties, the Carpet Company and Landmark Properties, were part of a multi-faceted development undertaking he started after going into a mobile-home-park business as a young man with his father.

His most celebrated work began in 2005 when he and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints accomplished a task that the city of Mesa had not been able to do for decades, turning a blighted neighborhood into a gateway for visitors headed to the historic temple.

Barney quietly spent nearly $4 million to purchase and refurbish 21 houses over four years in the area just east of Mesa’s original square-mile town site. The church was already a significant landowner in the area.

Barney, whose lineage began with Mesa’s original Mormon settlers, pursued the project to offer some of that property to the church for a planned distribution center that fronts Main Street. The center would have enough space for receptions, a credit union and a bookstore.

“He was one of a kind,” said Carol McCormack, president of the Mesa United Way. “He was not only a donor of money, he spent a lot of his personal time helping young people to make prudent decisions in their lives. He found it meaningful to help guide young people into adulthood and counsel them in making good decisions. He believed very strongly in helping others in the community. He had a great heart.”

Landmark Properties had been one of the United Way’s Cornerstone Companies, meaning that it paid for fundraising and administrative costs so more of the charity’s revenue is distributed directly to agencies.

Improving the blighted near the Arizona Temple had been the focus of talks for years between city and church leaders. National Mormon leaders made an unexpected pitch to Gov. Janet Napolitano for state funding for the redevelopment of the area around the Mesa temple. Napolitano said then that Mesa would take the lead.

Results, however, were few, until Barney began his work.

He served as a bishop and high councilman in the Mormon Church.

Link to article

The Mormon Temple

Saturday, January 3rd, 2009

From Culture11.com:

Yesterday, we discussed the deep ahistorical nature of religious rites around the New Year.  Today I want to detail a set of religious rites in the Mormon faith centered around the temple.

A few years ago I picked up a friend from Baltimore Washington International Airport and we drove into DC.  Coming down Interstate 95 and onto the Beltway you can’t help but notice the dramatic rise of a large palace-like structure on the horizon.    Known as the Washington D.C. Temple, the windowless building sits dramatically against a wooded hilltop in Kensington, MD.  The temple, built in 1973, boasts an exterior of marble (translucent at some points within the temple), six gold layered spires (the highest rising 288 ft) and a 200 ft stain glass window.

“What the heck is that?” he literally shouted.  (I think he used the non-Mormon version of “heck”) .  I chuckled as we drove under a footbridge, which until recently, bore some humorous graffiti: “Surrender Dorothy!”  A cute joke that even Mormons enjoyed until it was painted over.  We had a hour in traffic to kill so I gave him the whole story.  Here’s a short version:

Among Mormons the temple is viewed as a foundational element of the faith. Teenagers are encouraged to keep themselves morally clean to enter the temple.  New converts wait a year after their baptism to prepare to enter the temple. Eternal marriages are solemnized in the temple.  All that genealogy buzz you hear so much about culminates with a specific ordinances in the temple. Whole cities in Utah were laid out around the temple.  It is one of the apex symbols of the Mormon faith.

Mormonism is all about renewal and restoration.  The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints teaches that Christianity fell into disrepair and that the authority of God (the Priesthood) was taken from the earth.  Mormons believe that Joseph Smith was chosen as a prophet to restore the true Church of Jesus Christ upon the earth based on the same foundation that was laid by Christ with the same authority.  One point of this restoration is practice of temple worship.

Rather than dwell on the deep religious parallels to ancient faiths I want to describe to you some of the cultural aspects of the temple today:

  • All about the Family - Temples are all about the family.  Families teach their children from an early age to revere the temple.  Children sing: “I love to see the temple, I’m going there someday, to feel the Holy Spirit, to listen and to pray.”  My children have drawn pictures of the temple since they could pick up a crayon. As a family we go each year to the Washington, DC temple to see the lights and listen to music in the Visitors’ Center.  My eldest daughter has gone into the temple to partake in Baptisms for the dead.  My wife and I were “sealed” in the Oakland Temple in a beatiful ceremony surrounded by our families.  The promise of the temple to families is an eternal promise, namely, that if you keep the temple covenants you are promised to live with your familiy forever and not just “until death do you part.”
  • Baptisms for the Dead - There are various ordinances which take place in a Mormon temple.  Kids 12 and older can participate in “Baptisms for the Dead.”  A baptismal font in the lower level of the temple rests on the backs of twelve oxen carved from stone symbolizing the 12 tribes of Israel.  Baptisms are performed by proxy on behalf of ancestors who did not have the opportunity to receive the Gospel in their lives.
  • Endowments - Next to marriage, the “endowment” is one of the highest ordinances you can obtain in the temple.  The endowment is a “coming-of-age” ritual for many of the Mormon faith.  You receive your endowments before your go on your mission or before your are married.  Essentially, the endowment is a ritual where Mormons are taught about the foundation of the world and deep doctrines of their faith in a symbolic rite that mirrors many ancient New Year acts.  When Mormon adults “go to the temple” this is the ritual which they partake in.  After your first endowment you can return to the temple to participate in the ritual however many times your want.
  • Marriages - When a child is blessed (in a regular chapel setting at about 2-3 months old) one phrase you commonly hear from the father: “I bless you that you may find that special son of God and with him be sealed for all eternity in the temple.”  Like any other family, marriage is a culminating event which ties the ages together.  Doubly so in the Mormon faith as the act of “sealing” binds you to your spouse, your parents, and the parents which have been sealed before you.  Children born to you after you are sealed are born “in the covenant”.  Families who are converts can take their entire families into the temple to be sealed together.
  • Genealogy - As you may know Mormons are big into genealogy and the temple is the reason.  We research our ancestors and submit their names to the temple to have ordinances performed on their behalf and we stand in as proxies.  This rite calls to mind the discussion yesterday about Mircea Eliade and how religious excercises bring the contemporary and the historical together.
  • Prayer, Healing and Faith - After an endowment “session” members of the church are ushered into the Celestial room, typically at the center of the temple.  Everyone in the temple ceremony is dressed in white and the Spirit in the room is peaceful and perfect for contemplation and prayer.  During the endowment ceremony a special prayer is said on behalf of those who are sick, ill or otherwise afflicted.  The faith of those present is seen as a factor to help heal those in need.

Link to article

Mormon church plans temple in Peru

Sunday, December 14th, 2008

From LocalNews8.com:

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - Top leaders of the Mormon church on Saturday announced plans to build a temple in Trujillo, Peru.

The temple will bring the total number of temples in South America - existing or under construction - to 17.

Worldwide, the Trujillo temple will be the 146th for the Utah-based Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Mormon missionaries first began preaching in Trujillo in 1960. The first church baptisms were in 1961 and the first church meeting house built in 1963.

The Trujillo temple will be built on the site of an existing meeting house. Church officials say it will serve an estimated 88,000 members in the area.

Latter-day Saints use temples for their most sacred religious ceremonies, including weddings and proxy baptisms. Only church members in good standing are allowed to enter a temple.

Link to article

American Idol's Brooke White to turn on Mesa temple lights

Friday, November 28th, 2008

From The East Valley Tribune:

A young woman already used to the bright lights will flip the switch Friday night and turn the Mesa Arizona Temple Grounds into a dazzling world of colorful holiday splendor.

Mormon support of gay marriage ban ignites vigil

Brooke White, 25, who grew up in a Mesa ward of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and is now a recording artist in Van Nuys, Calif., finished in the top five last spring as part of the seventh season of “American Idol” on the Fox network.

White, the daughter of Brad and Kaylene White of Mesa, will turn the switch for the 29th annual temple lights display ceremonies at 7 p.m. on the grounds, 525 E. Main St. The lights will be on daily through Jan. 1, from 5:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. for the public to see as they wander the sprawling grounds.

Church leaders expect more than a million people will visit the manicured grounds to walk through the gardens where trees, shrubs, walls, walkways and water features have been trimmed in colored lights on the theme “Celebrate the Birth of Christ in Lights and Music.” At 7 p.m. each day, a Valley choir, ensemble or soloist will perform on the stage on the south side of the visitors center, for a concert of about a half-hour.

More than 200 groups applied for one of the 34 nights, said event spokesman Cecily Markland. Some were requested to apply because of the quality of their music, she said.

“Some are from schools, and some are the bigger choirs in the area that would bring people with them,” she said.

On Dec. 14, however, a multidenominational choir, Voices of Peace, will sing at 7 p.m., and a combined choir of St. Anne’s Catholic Church in Gilbert and the Gilbert Arizona Stakes Choir will perform at 8 p.m. The full schedule may be found online (www.christmastemplelights.com/pages/concerts.html).

For the fifth year, the visitors center will host international nativity displays. Carefully chosen sets of crafted manger scenes by artisans from around the world will wrap around a room as individual interpretations of Christ’s birth.

“Each of these sets is an expression of deep love for the Savior,” said Debbie Horne, the exhibit’s designer. Among this year’s scenes are sets from China, Japan, Peru and South Africa.

That display opened Monday and may be seen daily from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. through Jan. 1, the same hours the visitors center will be open for tours and the showing of a short film depicting Christ’s birth.

Volunteers who have worked on the lights have continued a process to replace conventional lights with light-emitting diode (LED) lights, which use up to 90 percent less electricity.

“When you look at them, they are way brighter,” Markland said. “They are a little more dramatic.”

“It is absolutely spectacular,” said Dee Hobbs, who has overseen the event for five years.

Known as one of the Southwest’s most popular Christmas displays, the temple lights are the result of more than 4,000 volunteers working about 10,000 hours. “It has grown to be the largest-known volunteer-driven Christmas lights display,” Markland said.

Within a few years of its beginnings in 1980 with just 5,000 lights, ABC’s “Good Morning America” dubbed the Mesa light show one of the nation’s three “must-see” holiday lighting displays.

Workers typically start in September, removing light strings from a warehouse and painstakingly going over each light. Assignments to decorate certain areas of the grounds are given to families or single wards, for example.

“We have people who do it year after year,” Markland said. “We have had an outpouring of help and willingness to do it.”

Link to article

Purchase Revia
Cheap Casodex
Purchase Evecare
Order Ultram
Order Urispas
Buy Renalka
Cheap Trazodone
Purchase Claritin
Purchase Cialis
Cheap Altace
Purchase Flonase
Bactroban
Order Zebeta
Buy Lanoxin
Order Xenacore
Order Nimotop
Atarax
Lamictal
Avandamet
Order Mycelex-G
Order Xeloda
Cheap Diabecon
Sinequan
Buy Confido
Quibron-T
Ativan
Order Bactroban
Purchase Lasix
Endep
Purchase Soma
Buy Lamisil
Order Requip
Purchase Zerit
Cheap Trandate
Buy Diarex
Cheap Detrol
Purchase Lukol
Purchase Lorazepam
Prometrium
Buy Tenormin
Purchase Femcare
Purchase Brite
Order Synthroid
Cheap Vasodilan
Order Neurontin
Purchase Augmentin
Buy Celebrex
Order Sumycin
Order Zetia
Sustiva
Geodon
Buying Alprazolam
Order Imitrex
Trazodone
Purchase Aleve
Order Singulair
Order Cardura
Buy Mentax
Order Pletal
Order Rumalaya
Purchase Zyloprim
Buy Lortab
Buy Glucophage
Acomplia
Cheap Confido
Order Hydrocodone
Order Proscar
Cheap Rocaltrol
Buy Online
Order Exelon
Buy Norco
Buy Leukeran
Order Xanax
Buy Nolvadex
Buy Oxycontin
Buy Ionamin
Differin
Order Himcospaz
Purchase Nicotinell
Buy Acyclovir
Buy Sumycin
Purchase Rocaltrol
Order Reosto
Purchase Amaryl
Purchase Loprox
Cheap Zyban
Buy Rimonabant
Buy Danazol
Penisole
Zyban
Purchase Viagra
Purchase Glucophage
Buy Xenacore
Buy Tablet
Order Clomid
Cheapest Ultram
Buy Zestril
Zocor
Cheap Watson
Cheap Augmentin
Buy Feldene
Purchase Shoot
Order Flovent
Purchase Protonix
Cheap Nexium
Adipex
Cheap Snoroff
Tramadol
Purchase Sustiva
Order Casodex
Cheap Brafix
Buy Lukol
Order Nolvadex
Order Geodon
Order Acomplia
Purchase Crestor
Cheap Tricor
Cheap Himcospaz
Purchase Ansaid
Atacand
Buy Viagra
Purchase Levitra
Purchase Naprosyn
Purchase Accupril
Cheap Imitrex
Buy Arava
Lincocin
Cheap Naprosyn
Purchase Neurontin
Purchase Himcocid
Order Rhinocort
Cheap Nimotop
Order Prednisone
Cheap Propecia
Buy Brite
Order Lozol
Glucophage
StretchNil
Purchase Koflet
Arimidex
Cheap Vytorin
Buy Ambien
Cheap Retin-A
Trimox
Order Mevacor
Mental Booster
Buy Nimotop
Purchase Diovan
Purchase Hoodia
Purchase Lasuna
Diabecon
Monoket
Purchase Ashwagandha
Purchase Loxitane
Purchase Lotensin
Nicotinell
Cheap Tenuate
Order Combivent
Cheap Topamax
Order Differin
Purchase Effexor
Buy Flomax
Order Lexapro
Wellbutrin SR
Cheap Nolvadex
Buy Desyrel
Avandia
Purchase CLA
Purchase Feldene
Allegra
Cheap Prevacid
Order Buspar
Order Acticin
Pamelor
Trandate
Buy Topamax
Tentex Forte
Cheap Himplasia
Myambutol
Vantin
Darvocet
Isoptin
Purchase Styplon
Watson
Buy Purim
Cheap Nicotinell
Order Pravachol
Purchase Zetia
Cheap Accupril
Order Deltasone
Purchase Xanax
Order Claritin
Cheap Nonoxinol
Cheap Carisoprodol
Buy Proventil
Cheap Feldene
Order Seroquel
Buy Azulfidine
Vasotec
Viramune
Buy Loxitane
Buy Penisole
Order Lariam
Cheap Famvir
Order Zantac
Buy Rogaine
Purchase Zovirax
Purchase Darvocet
Purchase Lexapro
Cyklokapron
Cheap Tulasi
Buy Aristocort
Premarin
Levaquin
Phentermine
Purchase Mycelex-G
Diovan
Order Effexor
Buy Soma
Buy Lopid
Purchase Retin-A
Didronel
Order Lukol
Order Diovan
Cheap Omnicef
Order Depakote
Purchase Clonazepam
Order Cymbalta
Buy Geodon
Cheap StretchNil
Order Lincocin
Purchase Prevacid
Order Lipitor
Eurax
Order Hoodia
Cheap Abana
Lynoral
Purchase Amoxil
Purchase Cipro
Actos
Cardizem
Order Lanoxin
Cheap Aciphex
Liv.52
Buy Altace
Purchase Seroquel
Cheap Eurax
Buy Lasuna
Purchase Relafen
V-Gel
Purchase Topamax
Cheap Lisinopril
Buy Prometrium
Purchase Tenormin
Order Bonnisan
Order Diabecon
Order Tramadol
Cheap Prograf
Order Calan
Order Propecia
Cheap Depakote
Order Myambutol
Cheap Cardura
Order Zithromax
Order Crestor
Cheap Zovirax
Purchase Aristocort
Purchase Geriforte
Purchase Mobic
Buy Diflucan
Order Plavix
Purchase Coreg
AyurSlim
Purchase Biaxin
Cymbalta
Buy Prozac
Buy Cyklokapron
Buy Dosages
Purchase Lotrisone
Order Ativan
Order Atacand
Penis Growth
Cheap Aricept
Herbal Phentermine
Cheap Isoptin
Cheap Septilin
Diakof
Order Prozac
Buy Omnicef
Purchase Ephedrine
Order Revia
Purchase Kamagra
Lozol
SleepWell (Herbal
Buy Singulair
Xeloda
Order Risperdal
Order Brahmi
Order Mentax
Serophene

Church Responds to Jewish News Statements

Sunday, November 16th, 2008

From LDS Newsroom:

Leaders of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints are very disappointed over statements made in a media advisory from Mr. Ernest Michel, honorary chairman of the American Gathering of Holocaust Survivors.  The advisory announced a press event on Monday, 10 November, in New York.

The Church stands by its word. It has no intention of performing baptisms or other rites in its temples for Holocaust victims, except in the very rare instances where such people may have living descendants who are members of the Church. Such exceptions were noted and agreed to in 1995. The understanding reached in 1995 determined that the Church would remove Holocaust names from its public database immediately, which the Church has done. It further said that Jewish groups would provide to the Church any names that reappeared on the database so the Church could remove them. The Church cannot understand why Mr. Michel has refused now to provide those names to the Church so the Church can maintain the spirit of that 1995 understanding.

The media advisory also claimed that Church leaders had refused to meet and “broke off negotiations in July. “ This is absolutely false. Church leaders met with Mr. Michel in New York on 3 November, along with representatives of other respected Jewish community organizations. The Church’s written response to Mr. Michel and to that meeting is found here. It did not receive a reply.

Church leaders and members empathize with the depth of feeling of all Jews regarding the Holocaust.  Such regard and empathy have motivated the Church to remain in talks about this subject for so many years.  However, with his press conference, Mr. Michel seems to have unilaterally terminated those discussions and has presumably rejected the proposals set forth in the Church’s 6 November 2008 letter. Those steps by Mr. Michel on behalf of the American Gathering were both unnecessary and unfortunate, and belie the long and valued mutual regard that has existed in the past years.

Link to article

Tens of thousands hear Pres. Monson speak in Mexico City

Sunday, November 16th, 2008

From The Deseret News:

MEXICO CITY — The colossal Aztec Stadium is anchored in Mexican sports history — it’s hosted Summer Olympic events (1968) and a pair of World Cup soccer finals.

On Saturday, the storied venue secured a chapter in Mormon history. Some 87,000 people squeezed into the open air stadium to hear counsel from President Thomas S. Monson and enjoy a Mexican cultural event that boasted a cast of more than 8,000 youth. It was perhaps the largest gathering to ever listen to an LDS president in person.

Meanwhile, with its sheer size and attendance, the event doubled as a reminder of the Church’s strength in Mexico. A few years ago, Mexico became the first nation outside the United States to past the million-member mark.

The cultural program was staged in conjunction with Sunday’s rededication of the Mexico City Mexico Temple. It featured an 80-minute display of music, dance and Mexican history.

In his opening comments, President Monson spoke of his childhood connection to Salt Lake City’s Mexican community. He had Spanish-speaking pals and developed a taste for enchiladas at their family dinner tables. He even performed an impromptu verse of the Spanish folk song “El Rancho Grande.”

Events such as Saturday’s program are special, he said. Secure them to memory.

“Write in your journal tonight or tomorrow what you saw this evening; how you felt this evening,” President Monson said.

His first counselor in the First Presidency, President Henry B. Eyring, along with his daughter, Sister Ann M. Dibb, joined President Monson on the program. Sister Dibb serves as the second counselor in the church’s Young Women General Presidency.

The cultural program featured folk dances from Mexican regions such as Chihuahua, Veracruz and Jalisco. The young actors also re-enacted moments from Mexican history, including the battle for independence and the Mexican

Revolution. The show concluded with a medley of LDS hymns and a procession of full-time missionaries across the Aztec Stadium field.

When the weather cooled, President Monson and President Eyring pulled on colorful Mexican serapes to keep warm.

The tens of thousands inside the stadium closed the evening by coming to their feet and waving white handkerchiefs in the direction of the two church leaders. President Monson and President Eyring pulled out handkerchiefs of their own and returned the salute.

Link to article

Book Review: A President, a Church, and Trails West details Independence and the historical preservation debate

Sunday, November 2nd, 2008

From www.kansascity.com:

Just what is too much Harry?

It’s a question that surfaces in Independence. One example occurred in 1993, when city officials approved the demolition of a vacant gas station that Harry Truman, the 33rd president, sometimes frequented after returning from Washington in the early 1950s.

After hearing the testimony of residents who believed Truman’s connection with the structure deemed it worth preserving as part of the built environment he once knew, the Independence City Council reversed its decision.

The gas station still stands.

The context for what may strike some as a trivial controversy occurred about 10 years before. That’s when the Independence City Council in 1984 voted to reduce the size of the city’s heritage district, following debate over the plans of the First Baptist Church of Independence to remove several residences near the Truman home so it could expand its building. In this instance, writes author Jon E. Taylor, those wishing to preserve Truman’s old neighborhood came into open conflict with church officials seeking to grow their own faith community.

And yet the First Baptist Church wasn’t the only Independence church wanting to tear down old structures near the Truman home.

If it sounds complicated, it is. The sheer amount of historic event per square foot in Independence may not rival colonial Philadelphia, but it’s plenty rich enough. The Truman preservation drama is only one piece of it.

That’s why Jon E. Taylor’s book, A President, a Church, and Trails West, represents a public service. Anyone who may casually decide to drop in on historic preservation topics in Independence can feel like a tag-along guest at a family holiday dinner who innocently wanders into the middle of a dialogue that has been going on since sometime after the pumpkin pie. Consider Taylor the peacemaking uncle who declares a ceasefire and then summarizes the story so far.

Truman’s story is familiar. After returning to Independence in 1953, the former president built his library, dedicated in 1957.

But there’s also the 19th-century wagon-wheel legacy of those who traveled west on overland trails — Santa Fe, California and Oregon — many of whom outfitted themselves in Independence. Eastern Jackson County is studded with inscribed markers denoting the trails’ various paths.

Then there’s Joseph Smith Jr., the Mormon prophet who is believed in 1831 to have dedicated a location in Independence as the site of a future temple. Today the spiral-topped temple of the Community of Christ Church (formerly the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints) dominates the Independence skyline. The Mormon Church (or Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints), based in Salt Lake City, maintains a visitors center just to its south.

All are reasons why Independence may lead the Kansas City area in the number of granite markers planted by highways and bronze plaques embedded in sidewalks.

And yet this enlightened regard for events long passed was a hard time in coming.  (cont.)

Link to article

Mormon Temple in Laie to close for 18 months of renovations

Thursday, October 9th, 2008

From The Honolulu Advertiser:

(Photo from www.ransomweb.com)

The La’ie Hawai’i Temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints will close for at least 18 months starting on Dec. 29 to undergo a big renovation.
Along with replacing the roof and exterior windows, temple president H. Ross Workman expects parts of the interior will be upgraded. The project is now out to bid, he said.

And once the work is done, the general public may get a chance to see parts of the interior that are usually open only to members of the church. When the previous major renovation of the temple was finished in 1978, more than 100,000 people toured the temple.

The upcoming temporary closure affects 16 full-time administrators and staff, plus church members who rely on the temple for special rituals, such as “sealing” a marriage for eternity.

The renovation is being handled by the temple department in Salt Lake City, so the estimated cost wasn’t available. However, it was expected to cost in the millions.

“Temples are held to an extraordinarily high level of quality, even higher than commercial buildings,” said Workman, who’s been in the post for more than a year.

“Over time, in tropical areas, these buildings tend to deteriorate. The purpose of the church is to be sure this temple is always at the highest construction standard. That means renovation and upgrades and repairs are going to be necessary to maintain its high quality.”

Open house Possible

Church spokesman Jack Hoag said a major renovation occurs “every several decades.” The previous major renovation began in 1976 and added a front entrance, enlarged facilities and ordinance rooms equipped for multimedia presentations.

Such makeovers often create a chance for outsiders to get a rare inside glimpse of the temple.

“Traditionally, there’s always been an open house prior to the rededication of the temple,” Hoag said, though both he and Workman said they have received no confirmation of that.

In 1978, the last time the La’ie temple was publicly open, 105,505 people passed through its doors over three weeks.  (cont.)

Link to article

Mormon temple planned for Rome

Sunday, October 5th, 2008

From The Dallas Morning News:

  SALT LAKE CITY – Mormon church president Thomas S. Monson said Saturday the church will build a temple in Rome, the home of the Roman Catholic Church.

The Rome temple is one of five new temples planned by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Others will be in Calgary, Canada; Cordoba, Argentina; Philadelphia and in the greater Kansas City, Mo. area.

Temples play an important role in the lives of Latter-day Saints. Only members in good standing may enter temples, which are used for sacred religious ceremonies, including proxy baptisms and wedding ceremonies known as sealings.

Monson’s announcement came as the church opened its two-day semiannual General Conference. The event draws more than 100,000 to downtown Salt Lake City, packing the faith’s 21,000-seat conference center at each of five sessions.

The 13 million-member Utah-based church currently has 128 operating temples worldwide. Construction or plans for another 12 were already in the works before Saturday’s announcement.

The locations selected for new temples reflect the growth of the Mormon church.

There are currently 11 Mormon temples in Europe, but none are in the Mediterranean region. Mormons have had a presence in Italy since 1850, although its missionaries have not always been allowed to proselytize there, according to information on a church Web site.

Currently the church has more than 22,600 members in Italy. In May, the Vatican’s Congregation for Clergy issued an order to Catholic dioceses worldwide to withhold member registries from Mormons. Officials said the step would prevent Mormons from posthumously baptizing by proxy their Catholic ancestors.

A Kansas City-area temple should hold great significance for Mormons. In the 1830s church founder Joseph Smith led an early Mormon migration to Independence, Mo., and declared the area would be the center of Zion and the New Jerusalem. Now a Kansas City suburb, many Mormons also believe the area was the original site of the Garden of Eden.

Worldwide temple building is a legacy from 15th church president Gordon B. Hinckley, who began the effort so that members of the church outside the United States could more easily access the buildings to perform their religious rituals.

The Calgary temple will increase the number of temples in Canada, where the church has more than 170,00 members, to eight. The Cordoba temple will be the second in Argentina and bring the total number of temples in Latin America to 34. Argentina has more than 363,000 Latter-day Saints.

There are 51 temples in the United States, according to a data on a church Web site. The Kansas City-area temple will be Missouri’s second. The Philadelphia temple is Pennsylvania’s first.

Architecturally, temples are towering white buildings with tall steeples. Many are topped with a trumpet-blowing golden angel draped in flowing robes. The figure represents the angel Moroni, whom Mormons believe led Smith to a set of buried golden plates that, when translated, became known as the Book of Mormon, the faith’s central text.

A rapidly growing faith, the Mormon church has a presence in more than 170 countries. Well established in North and South America and Europe, some of its most rapid growth has occurred in Africa, where the faith now claims more than 250,000 members.

More than 52,000 church missionaries are serving around the world, but Monson said Saturday there remain places where Latter-day Saints are not allowed to freely proselytize.   (cont.)

Link to article here

Mesa AZ: ‘Book of Mormon’ art on display at LDS temple

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008

From The Arizona Republic:

Artwork depicting scenes from the Book of Mormon will be on display starting Saturday at the Mesa temple for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

The 12 paintings by Arnold Friberg were commissioned by the church in the 1950s.

The original work is located at Temple Square in Salt Lake City. The artwork shown in the public event at the Mesa temple will be lithographs signed by Friberg.

One of the paintings was used to model the costume for the character of Moses in The Ten Commandments, said Chad Harris, art director for the show.

If you go

When: The paintings will be at the Mesa temple for six weeks beginning Saturday.

Where: Visitors’ Center, 101 S. LeSueur, Mesa. The grand opening will be 68 p.m. Saturday featuring music by Gilbert pianist Dustin Snow.

Cost: Free.

Link to article